WILMINGTON, N.C. —Florence made landfall 10 miles east of Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, on Friday morning as a Category 1 hurricane, with 90 mph winds. It has since been downgraded to a tropical storm, but is not going anywhere fast.

The storm roared ashore under the cover of darkness, pummeling the region with pounding rain, widespread flooding and catastrophic winds. Gusts reached over 100 mph -- the highest recorded in North Carolina since 1958. It tore roofs and facades off buildings and toppled trees.

By midday, Florence had already claimed its first lives, when a tree crashed onto a home in Wilmington, North Carolina, killing a mother and her infant daughter. Rescue workers were able only to save her father.

A tree that fell on a house, killing two people, is seen during Hurricane Florence in Wilmington, North Carolina on September 14, 2018.
Andrew Caballero-reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

In Morehead City, what was once a building became a pile of rubble. In Belhaven, the rising Pungo River nearly swallowed the firstfloor of a house. In Wilmington, high winds blew transformers, plunging the city into darkness.

In Beaufort, CBS News correspondent David Begnaud reported Friday night that the storm was still lashing the city.

"Bottom line, tonight, it is just as bad as it was 12 hours ago and it is expected to continue for another 12-24 hours," Begnaud said.

"It will not stop, this weather event of Florence," Begnaud said.

"It will not stop": Florence hits Beaufort, North Carolina

At one point, the 350-mile-wide but slow-moving storm packed winds so fierce that "CBS Evening News" anchor Jeff Glor nearly lost contact with CBS News' New York studio during the morning broadcast.

Florence drove nearly 1 million people from their homes and nearly 700,000 lost power.

Rain ranging from one to three and a half feet has already fallen, and it's not over.

"For overall damage it will be hard at the end of the day, I think, to find a rival for this storm," said North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper.

In Wilmington, many of the trees that contributed to its historic beauty are now gone.

George Pace returned to his neighborhood and saw his home for the first time, expecting the worst, but discovering only minimal damage.

While Florence may be gone by Saturday, she will not be forgotten.

"You can walk faster than this storm is moving," said Wilmington Mayor Bill Saffo.

Saffo said it could be longer than two weeks before power is fully restored.

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, has been lashed by torrential rains and near-hurricane force winds, CBS News correspondent Don Dahler reported. Although the storm is passing north of Myrtle Beach, the concern now is that river water from North Carolina will flow into the area and combine with all the water that is already there. That could affect the infrastructure, bridges, residences, farms and other buildings, Dahler said.

"The cost to South Carolina, if that happens, if the storm continues the way it is going, could be in the billions," Dahler said.

Myrtle Beach slammed by Florence

The White House said President Trump will tour areas affected by Florence next week, once it is determined that his visit will not disrupt rescue and recovery operations.